The Seventh Scroll tes-2

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The Seventh Scroll tes-2 Page 40

by Wilbur Smith


  business in hand. "As I promised, I won't detain you longer than is

  absolutely necessary. Inspector Galla here will be recording your

  statements. Firstly I would like to deal with the disappearance and

  death of Major Brusilov. I presume you are aware that he was formerly an

  officer in the Russian KGB?"

  The interview lasted much longer than they had expected. General Obeid

  was thorough, but unfailingly polite. Finally he had their statements

  typed out by a police stenographer, and after they had read and signed

  them, the general walked with them as far as the entrance where their

  car was waiting. Nicholas recognized this as a mark of special favour.

  "If there is anything I can do for you, anything that need, please do

  not hesitate to call upon me. It has you been a great pleasure meeting

  you, Dr Al Simma. You must come back to Ethiopia and visit us again

  soon."

  "Despite our little misadventure, I have thoroughly enjoyed your

  beautiful country" she told him sweetly. "You may see us again sooner

  than you expect."

  "What a charming man," she remarked, as they settled into the back seat

  of Sir Oliver's Rolls. "I really like him."

  "It would seem to be mutual,'said Nicholas.

  yan's words were prophetic. There were idenical envelopes addressed to

  each of them lying at their places on the dining-room table the next

  morning when they came down to breakfast.

  Nicholas opened his as he ordered coffee from the waiter in his

  ankle-length shamnia, and his expression changed as he read the note.

  "Hello!" he exclaimed. "We made an even bigger impression on the boys in

  blue than we realized. General Obeid wants to see me again."He read

  aloud from the note, "You are ordered to present yourself at police

  headquarters at or before noon."' Nicholas whistled softly. "Strong

  language. No please or thank you."

  "Mine is identical." Royan glanced at the note on an official police

  letterhead. "What on earth do you suppose it means?"

  "We will find out soon enough," Nicholas promised her. "But it sounds a

  little ominous. Methinks the love affair is over."

  This morning, when they arrived at police head, quarters, there was no

  reception committee to welcome them. The guard at the private entrance

  sent them around to the general charge office, where they were involved

  in a long, confused discussion with the desk officer, who had only a

  rudimentary knowledge of English. From previous experience in Africa

  Nicholas knew better than to lose his temper, or even to let his

  irritation show. Finally the desk officer held a long whispered

  telephone conversation with some unknown person, at the end of which he

  waved them airily towards a hard wooden bench against the far wall.

  "You wait. Man come soon." fill For the next forty minutes they shared

  their seat with a colourful selection of other supplicants, applicants,

  complainants and petty criminals. One or two of them were bleeding

  copiously from assault by persons unknown, and yet others were in

  manacles.

  "It seems our star is on the wane," Nicholas remarked as he held a

  handkerchief to his nose. It was obvious that some of his neighbours had

  not had a close acquaintance with soap and water for some time. "No more

  VIP treatment." At the end of forty minutes Inspector Galla, he who so

  deferentially the day before, looked had treated them over the partition

  and beckoned to them in a high-handed fashion.

  He ignored Nicholas's outstretched right hand and led them through to

  one of the back rooms. There he did not offer them a seat but addressed

  Nicholas coldly. "You are responsible for the loss of a firearm that was

  in your possession."

  "That is correct. As I explained to you in my statement yesterday-'

  Inspector Galla cut him off. "The loss of a firearm due to negligence is

  a very serious offence," he said severely.

  "There was no negligence on my part," Nicholas denied.

  "You left the firearm unguarded. You made no attempt to lock it in a

  steel safe. That is negligence."

  "With respect,- Inspector, there is a notable dearth of steel safes in

  the Abbay gorge."

  "Negligence," Galla repeated. "Criminal negligence.

  How are we to know that the weapon has not fallen into the hands of

  elements opposed to the government?"

  "You mean some unknown person may overthrow the government with a 275

  Rigby?"Nicholas smiled.

  Inspector Galla ignored the sally, and produced two documents from the

  drawer of his desk. "It is my duty to ation orders on both you and Dr Al

  serve these deport Simma. You have twenty-four hours to leave Ethiopia,

  and thereafter you will be considered to be prohibited immigrants, both

  of you."

  "Dr Al Simma has not lost any weapons," Nicholas pointed out mildly. "In

  fact as far as I am aware, she has never been even mildly negligent in

  her entire life." And again his comment was ignored.

  "Please sign here to acknowledge that you have received and understood

  the orders."

  "I would like to speak to General Obeid, the Commissioner of Police,'

  said Nicholas.

  "General Obeid left this morning for an inspection tour of the northern

  frontier districts. He will not return to Addis Ababa for some weeks."

  "By which time we will be safely back in England?"

  "Exactly." Inspector Galla smiled for the first time, a thin, wintry

  smirk. "Please sign here, and.here."

  "What happened?" Royan demanded, as the driver opened the door of the

  Rolls for her and she settled into the seat beside Nicholas. "It was all

  so sudden and unexpected. One moment everybody loved us, and the next we

  are being booted down the stairs."

  "Do you want my guess?" Nicholas asked, and then went on without waiting

  for her reply. "Nogo is not the only one in Pegasus's back pocket.

  Overnight Obeid has been in contact with von Schiller, and received his

  orders."

  "Do you realize what this means, Nicky? It means that we will not be

  able to return to Ethiopia. That puts the tomb of Mamose beyond our

  grasp." She stared at him with large dark eyes full of dismay.

  "When Duraid and I visited Iraq and Libya, neither of us had letters of

  invitation from either Saddam or Gadaffi, as I recall."

  "You look delighted at the prospect of breaking the law," she accused.

  "You are smirking all over your face."

  "After all, it is only Ethiopian law," he pointed out virtuously. "Not

  to be taken too seriously."

  "And it will be an Ethiopian prison they toss you into.

  That you can take seriously."

  "You too," he grinned, "if they catch us."

  You can be certain that HE has already registered a formal complaint

  with the President's office," Geoffrey told them as he drove them to the

  airport the next day. "He is most upset at the whole business, I can

  tell you. Deportation orders and all that rot.

  Never heard the likes."

  "Don't fuss yourself, old boy," Nicholas told him. "As it is, neither of

  us intends coming back here again. No harm done."

  "I
t's the principle of the thing. Prominent British subject being

  treated like a common criminal. No respect shown." He sighed. "Sometimes

  I wish I had been born a hundred years ago. We wouldn't have to put up

  with this sort of nonsense. just send a gunboat."

  "Quite so, Geoffrey, but please don't let it upset you." Geoffrey

  hovered around them like a cat with kittens while they checked in at the

  Kenya Airways counter. They had only their hand luggage, two small cheap

  nylon holdalls that they had bought that morning at a street market.

  Nicholas had rolled his dik'dik skin into a ball and wrapped it in an

  embroidered shamma that he had purchased in the same market.

  Geoffrey waited with them until their flight was called and waved to

  them after they passed through the barrier, aiming this affectionate

  display more at Royan than Nicholas.

  They had been allocated seats behind the wing, and Royan was beside the

  window. The Kenya Airways plane started its engines and began to taxi

  slowly past the airport buildings. Nicholas was arguing with a

  stewardess who wanted him to stow his precious dik-dik skin in its

  purple nylon bag in the overhead locker, while Royan peered out of the

  porthole beside her for her last glimpse of Addis during takeoffs

  Suddenly Royan stiffened in her seat, and while still gazing out of the

  window reached across and seized Nicholas's arm.

  "Look!" she hissed with such venom in her tone that he leaned across her

  to see what had excited her.

  "Pegasus!" she exclaimed, and pointed to the Falco executive jet that

  had just taxied in and parked at the far end of the airport buildings.

  The small, sleek aircraft was painted grpen and on its tall tail fill

  the scarlet horse reared on its hind legs in that stylized pose. While

  they watched through the window, the door in the fuselage of the green I

  Falcon was lowered, and a small reception committee waiting on the

  tarmac pressed forward expectantly to greet the passengers as they

  appeared in the doorway of the jet.

  The first of these was a small man, neatly dressed in a cream tropical

  suit and a white panama straw hat. Despite his size he exuded an air of

  confidence and command, that special aura of power. His face was pale,

  as though he had come from a northern winter, and it looked incongruous

  "in this setting. His jaw was firm and stubborn, his nose I prominent

  and his gaze beneath dark beetling eyebrows penetrating.

  Nicholas'recognized him immediately. He had seen him often enough on the

  auction floors at Sotheby's and Christie's. This man was not the type of

  person whom anyone would forget in a hurry.

  "Von Schiller!" he exclaimed, as the German surveyed with an imperial

  gaze the men who waited on the tarmac below him.

  "He looks like a bantam rooster," Royan murmured, "or Thai') a standing

  cobra."

  Von Schiller raised his panama hat and ran down the steps of the Falcon

  with a light, athletic tread, and Nicholas said quietly, "You wouldn't

  think that he is almost seventy." moves like a man of forty," Royan

  agreed. "He "He must dye his hair and eyebrows - see how dark they are."

  "My oath!" Nicholas was startled. "Look who is here to greet him."

  There was the glint of sunlight on decorations and regimental insignia.

  A tall figure in blue uniform detached itself from the welcoming group

  and touched the shiny patent-leather brim of his cap in a respectful

  salute, before taking von Schiller's hand and shaking it cordially.

  "Your erstwhile admirer, General Obeid. No wonder he could not meet us

  yesterday. He was much too busy."

  "Look, Nicky," Royan gasped. She was no longer watching the pair at the

  foot of the steps, who were still clasping hands as they chatted with

  animation. Her whole attention was focused on the top of the steps of

  the Falcon jet, where another, younger, man had appeared. He was

  bareheaded, and Nicholas had the impression of sallow skin and dense,

  dark, wavy hair.

  "Never seen him in my life before. Who is he?" Nicholas asked her.

  "Nahoot Guddabi. Duraid's assistant from the museum.

  The man who now has his job."

  As Nahoot started down the steps of the Falcon their own aircraft

  trundled on down the -tarmac, then swung out on to the main taxi-way and

  blocked any further view of the gathering beside the Pegasus jet. Both

  of them fell back in their seats and stared at each other for a long

  moment.

  Nicholas recovered his voice first.

  "A witches' sabbath. A convocation of the ugly ones.

  We were lucky to witness it. There are no more secrets now. We know very

  clearly who the opposition is."

  "Von Schiller is the puppet-master," she agreed, breathless with anger

  and horror. "But Nahoot Guddabi is his

  ,Bell hunting dog. Nahoot must be the one- who hired the killers in

  Cairo and turned them loose on us. Oh God, Nicky, you it's should have

  heard him at the funeral, going on about how much he admired and

  respected Duraid. The filthy, murib derous hypocrite!'

  They were both silent until the aircraft had taken off and climbed to

  cruise altitude, then Royan said quietly, "Of course, you were right

  about Obeid. He is deep in von Schiller's pocket also."

  "He may simply have been acting as the representative of the Ethiopian

  government, paying respect to a major foreign concession-holder,

  somebody who they hope is going to discover fabulous copper deposits in

  their poverty stricken country and make them all rich."

  She shook her head firmly.

  "If it was as simple as that, it would be one of the cabinet ministers

  meeting him, not the chief of police, No, Obeid has the stink of

  treachery on him, just the same as Nahoot." kIN Seeing her husband's

  killers in the flesh had reopened the half-healed wounds of Royan's

  grief and mourning.

  These bitter emotions were a flame that was burning he up ee, like the

  bushfire in the trunk of a hollow forest tr consuming her from within.

  Nicholas knew that he, could not quench that flame, that he could only

  hope to distract her for a while. He talked to her quietly, turning her

  dark thoughts away from death and vengeance to the challenge of Taita's

  game and the riddle of the lost tomb.

  By the time that they had changed planes at Nairobi and landed at

  Heathrow the following morning, the two of them had sketched out a plan

  of action for their return to the Nile gorge and the exploration of

  Taita'spool in the chasm. But although now Royan appeared on the surface

  to be her usual calm and cheerful self once again, Nicholas knew that

  the pain of her loss was still there beneath the surface.

  They landed at Heathrow so early that they walked through the

  immigration gates without running into a queue, and since they had no

  bags in the hold they did not have to play the customary game of

  roulette at the luggage carousel - will they arrive or won't they?

  carrying the dik-dik skin in the nylon bag under his arm, and with Royan

  limping on her cane on his other arm, Nicholas sauntered through the

  green channel of HM
Customs, as innocent as a cherub from the roof of

  the Sistine Chapel.

  "You are so brazen," she whispered to him once they were through and

  clear. "If you can lie so convincingly to Customs, how can I ever trust

  you again?"

  Their luck held. There was no queue at the taxi rank, and in a little

  over an hour after touch-down the taxi deposited them on the pavement

  outside Nicholas's town house in Knightsbridge. It was only eight-thirty

  on a Monday morning.

  While Royan showered, Nicholas went down to the corner shop under an

  umbrella to fetch some groceries Then they shared the task of cooking

  breakfast, Royan taking care of the toast while Nicholas whipped up his

  speciality, a herb omelette.

  "Surely you're going to need expert help when we go back to the Abbay

  gorge?" Royan observed, as she let the butter melt into the hot toast.

  I already have the right man in mind. I have worked before," he told

  her. "Ex-Royal Engineers. Expert with hi in diving and underwater

  construction. Retired and living in a little cottage in Devon. I suspect

  he is a little short of the ready, and bored out of his considerable

  mind. I expect him to jump at any opportunity to alleviate either

  condition."

  As soon as they had finished breakfast, Nicholas told her, "I will do

  the dishes. You take the films of the stele to be developed. There is a

  one-hour service at the branch of Boots opposite Harrods."

  "That's what I call a fair distribution of labour," she remarked with a

  long-suffering air. "You have a dishwasher, and it's raining again

  outside."

  "All right," he laughed. "To sweeten the pill, I'll lend you my

  raincoat. While you are waiting for the films to be developed you can go

  shopping to replace the togs you lost in the rockfalls I have some

  crucial phone calls to make."

  As soon as she had left, Nicholas settled at his desk with a notepad at

  one hand and the telephone at the other.

  His first call was to Quenton Park, where Mrs. Street tried not to show

  how delighted she was to have him home.

  "Your desk is about two feet deep with mail awaiting your return. It's

  mostly bills."

  "Cheerful, aren't we?"

  "The lawyers have been pestering me, and Mr Markham from Lloyd's has

  been ringing every day."

  "Don't tell any of them that I am back, there's a good girl." Nicholas

 

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